In re the probate of a paper purporting to be the last will of Gordon

50 N.J. Eq. 397
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMay 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 50 N.J. Eq. 397 (In re the probate of a paper purporting to be the last will of Gordon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the probate of a paper purporting to be the last will of Gordon, 50 N.J. Eq. 397 (N.J. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

The Ordinary.

The probate of the paper in dispute is resisted upon two contentions—-first, that the domicil of George P. Gordon, at his death, was in Brooklyn, in the State of New York, and for that reason that this court cannot, even if the paper be the will of George P. Gordon, admit it to probate, and, second, that the paper is a forgery and not the will of George P. Gordon.

I have no difficulty in disposing of the first of these grounds contest. It abundantly appears, if this will be valid, that there is personal property belonging to the testator’s estate within the jurisdiction of this court which must be administered under [400]*400the will. This being the fact, it is fully established that the will may be proved in this state, even though the testator, at his death,, were domiciled elsewhere and the will has not yet been proved at the place of domicil. Stevens v. Gaylor, 11 Mass. 255, 263 ; Varnar v. Bevil, 17 Ala. 286 ; Hyman v. Gaskins, 5 Ired. 267; Jaques v. Horton, 76 Ala. 238; Woods v. Matthews, 73 Mo. 477, 483.

Question as to the domicil of Mr. Gordon, although urged on-both sides at the argument, does not appear to -me to be necessarily in issue at this time. So far as personalty is concerned,, the law of the domicil would determine the capacity of the testator to make a will and, as well, the formalities to be observed in the execution of the will, but as there has been no contest upon either of these points I am not called upon to say what law shall control them, and therefore what the testator’s domicil was. The competency of evidence belongs to the law of the place of trial, and hence rulings upon its admission or rejection do not raise the question of domicil. It would, therefore, be a work of supererogation and of little value for me at this time to determine this disputed question of fact.

The second branch of the case presents the principal question-at issue. Is the paper offered for probate the genuine will of George P. Gordon ?

That the discussion of this question may be fully understood and appreciated, it is necessary to shortly, slate something of the history of the principal characters with which it will deal.

George P. Gordon, the alleged testator, was born in Salem,. Hew Hampshire, in 1810. In early life he was a printer by-trade. In 1846 he married Sarah Cornish, by whom, in 1847 or 1849, he had his only child, Mary Agnes, who survived him until May, 1890. After this marriage he invented a printing-press, which proved so profitable to him that he rapidly amassed a considerable fortune. It does not appear when his first wife-died, but it is shown-that in 1856 he married Lenore May, -who-survived him and afterwards became the wife of Henry DubqisVan W-yck, who had been a friend of Mr. Gordon and a constant visitor at his house. This second wife died, after Mr.. [401]*401Gordon’s death, in December, 1890, at Norfolk, Virginia, where she then lived with her second husband.

Prior to 1866, Mr. Gordon lived in Brooklyn. In that year he purchased a place in Wood bridge township, in the county of Middlesex, to which he removed with his wife and daughter. Erom Wood bridge he daily went to his place of business in the city of New York, at which he sold his printing presses. Until 1872 those presses were made for him by the firm of Nichols & Dangworthy, of Hope Valley, Rhode Island. In 1872 he erected a factory at Rahway, in this state, about two miles from his residence, at which he thereafter manufactured presses himself and of which he died seized and possessed. That factory still exists in operation as part of his estate, if the paper in dispute be valid. In 1869 he purchased land near the city of Norfolk, in the State of Virginia, which he put in charge of Henry Dubois Van Wyck, and upon which he maintained another residence which he and his wife occasionally visited. In 1874 he bought a house known as 155 Columbia Heights, in the-city of Brooklyn, and furnished it as a residence. To this house his daughter, who did not live on amicable terms with her stepmother, moved and became its mistress. Mrs. Gordon remained at the house in Woodbridge township as its mistress. It was Mr. Gordon’s custom to occasionally stay with his daughter at the house on Columbia Heights, and, from that fact and his conduct there, together with his former residence in Brooklyn, springs the contention that his domicil, at death, was in Brooklyn. In January, 1878, he died at Norfolk, Virginia. His body was brought to Brooklyn and buried in Greenwood cemetery in or near that city. He left the following immediate kindred surviving him: His sister, Mary Ann Doane, who died in 1887 (this sister had a son, A. Sidney Doane, since deceased, who was Mr. Gordon’s confidential clerk and assistant), and a grandnephew, another A. Sidney Doane, who is now one of the proponents of the paper here in dispute; also a brother, Cuthbert Collingwood Gordon, a Universalist minister, who died in 1883, leaving two sons— one, Henry, who is yet alive, and the other, Cuthbert, who died in 1886. I refer to the latter son because of his connection with [402]*402this case, which will hereafter appear; also two other sisters, Wealthy Jane Bogert and Adeline J. Gordon, both of whom still survive.

The paper in dispute is said to have been drawn and executed at the house of Henry Adams, iu Woodbridge township. It purports to have been witnessed by Henry Adams and his two sons, Alonzo C. P. Adams and John Q. Adams, all of whom died in the year 1875. The draughtsman of the instrument was Henry C. Adams, also a son of Henry Adams, who testifies that he superintended its execution. So far as appears, Henry C. Adams is the only living person who ever had any connection with or knowledge of the paper in dispute.

. Henry Adams and his son Henry C. were both lawyers at Port Plains, Montgomery county, New York. Prior to 1868, Henry Adams, being possessed of a modest fortune, retired from the practice of his profession and removed to this state, where he purchased a small farm of about sixty-five acres in Woodbridge township, and erected upon it a dwelling which was his residence for the remainder of his life. He had four sons, the three already mentioned and Edward L. Adams, who is now upwards of fifty years of age, and has been in actual possession of his father’s farm at Woodbridge since 1886. Prior to the last-named year, for a time not disclosed, he was in the west. What his occupation there was does not appear. It is shown that during his absence the farm was occupied by a tenant. It does not now appear what business Edward L. pursues, but I gather that he is a farmer and also a performer upon some musical instrument in a band.

In 1868, Henry C. Adams, being then about fifty years of age, gave^ up the practice of his profession at Port Plains and went to his father’s house at Woodbridge, where he met George P. Gordon, whose residence adjoined the father’s farm. He had very little property, not sufficient to justify his permanent retirement from remunerative employment. His explanation is that he gave up his law practice because he conceived the purpose of compiling a glossary of legal terms and publishing it; that he is a bachelor of frugal habits, and that his means from that which [403]*403he earned in the practice of his profession and from that which he has had from his father’s estate have been sufficient to supply his few wants while he has worked upon his book near the lai-ge libraries in the city of New York.

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50 N.J. Eq. 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-probate-of-a-paper-purporting-to-be-the-last-will-of-gordon-njsuperctappdiv-1892.